I had $50 in venmo, which I used to purchase groceries, because my bank account is currently negative.

Instead of using the $50 in my bank account, instead, a week later the $50 came out of my bank account, not touching the Venmo balance at all.

So now I have an overdraft fee, effectively meaning I paid 1.5 times for those groceries.

I don’t have “overdraft protection,” I’ve told my bank I don’t want overdrafts to go through, but fuck me for being poor I guess.

  • A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    17 hours ago

    No thanks, I prefer cash. Credit cards and debit cards can be disabled at a whim. Prone to being fucked up by computer error, don’t work when the internet is down, or during a disaster with no power.

    Cash always goes through, though. Cash will always remain king.

    • lmmarsano@lemmynsfw.com
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      edit-2
      15 hours ago

      Credit cards and debit cards can be disabled at a whim. Prone to being fucked up by computer error

      That’s the beauty

      • if my card goes missing, I can lock it
      • unauthorized charges can be reversed
      • I’m alerted of any charge immediately
      • cards extend warranties on purchases & provide purchase protections.

      don’t work when the internet is down, or during a disaster with no power.

      Unless you carry around a huge supply of cash at all times, you’ll be in the same bind withdrawing cash: ATMs & account ledgers run on power & networks.

      Cash always goes through, though.

      That’s also a problem: anyone can use my cash. If they steal it, I have no way to disable it, and it’s more difficult to recover. If I lose it, it’s most likely gone.

      Cash will always remain king.

      Not in terms of security or recovery.

      I could withdraw cash, and carry it around, but then it won’t earn high interest.